Scenario guided policy planning: processes, comparisons, and lessons from East Africa

Key messages: Participants in policy processes require constant communication and networking among stakeholders to be able to exploit the available policy windows. The review process requires a dynamic and engaging tool. The robustness of a review tool is one step toward having a good and fruitful r...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Muchunguzi, Perez, Ampaire, Edidah L., Acosta, Mariola, Rutting, Lucas, Tumuhereze, Martin, Mwongera, Caroline, Okiror, John Francis, Asten, Piet J.A. van
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79793
Descripción
Sumario:Key messages: Participants in policy processes require constant communication and networking among stakeholders to be able to exploit the available policy windows. The review process requires a dynamic and engaging tool. The robustness of a review tool is one step toward having a good and fruitful review process. Using socio-economic scenarios and quantitative evidence in policy review processes allows policy actors to develop a great body of information in an all-inclusive manner, keeping all stakeholders engaged. This alone, however, does not guarantee success. State and non-state actors need to invest in trust building if the citizenry is to benefit from the fast approaching private-public partnership frameworks. It is beneficial to work on a single policy document that is already under a review or formulation process.